Nick Carter robs A bank.
The instant the strange machine was
brought to a stop-and it was done wonderfully
soon, considering the speed at which they had been
traveling-the three men leaped to the ground
beside the track, and Nick was ordered to follow them.
He did so, and then he was told to
bear a hand; and, following directions that were given
him, he seized hold of the boxlike tonneau.
Almost in a twinkling of time after
that the machine was lifted from the track in sections,
and finally, still in sections, was carried to a highway
near at hand, where it was put together again, minus
the iron wheels. But there were other wheels
concealed in that commodious body, and these were
quickly taken out and adjusted.
Within twenty minutes of the time
when they came to a stop on the track, after rounding
the curve, the machine was fitted with regular automobile
wheels, and was ready to proceed along the highway.
Nick saw in this arrangement much
that had puzzled other men who had been on the job.
He had no doubt from what he knew of automobiles that
this machine was capable of sixty miles an hour, or
even more than that, on the highway; and, if that
was true, it, of course, could make a half greater
speed than that on rails.
But he made no comment. That
was not expected of him, and would have been resented
had he attempted to do so; but he climbed to his place
when he was told, and again they sped away toward some
destination, the nature of which he did not know.
Once he ventured to ask the man nearest
him what time it was, and received a curt “Shut
up!” by way of reply; so he remained silent after
that.
And after a while-less
than half an hour-they drove into a village,
and presently ran the machine around behind a church,
where it was placed in one of the stalls of a shed.
And still his three companions worked
in utter silence. Beyond now and then a curt
word uttered by Handsome, who seemed to be in command
of the expedition, nothing at all was said.
Nevertheless, each man there seemed
to know exactly what to do; as if every move they
made had been nicely planned out for them-and
such Nick believed to be the case.
When the machine was stored away,
the men fell into line, Nick being shoved into position
directly behind Handsome, and then, in Indian file,
they moved silently forward toward a high fence that
was near at hand.
They went over this one by one, Handsome
waiting with patience until the last one was over,
and then the march was taken up again.
They passed now through the rear of
a large yard, and before them loomed a brick building,
which Nick figured must be a courthouse; and after
a moment they made a half circuit around, and came
to a stop between two buildings of brick, one of them
being that one already mentioned.
The night was dark now, for the moon
had gone down, and there were no street lamps in that
village evidently; or, if there were, they were not
burned on nights when there was supposed to be a moon.
But there was light enough for Nick
to discover that they were close to the main street
of the village; he could see the store windows on the
opposite side; and it suddenly came to him that the
building that was next to them-the second
one-was a bank, and that they were about
to rob it.
He knew now what was expected of him;
and again he determined to see the thing through to
the end.
It was not to prevent one robbery
that he was engaged; but to prevent many. It
was not to apprehend the participants in a minor job
like this one promised to be, but to capture the head
that directed many such robberies, and so stop them
altogether.
And still no word-not even
a whisper-was spoken between the men.
They worked on in utter silence, as if their plans
had been thoroughly conned until they were learned
absolutely by heart.
Nor did they pause in the yard next
to the bank. There was scarcely a halt there;
but they passed to the rear of the building, and followed
one another over the high fence that was there, to
the rear of the bank building.
Keeping themselves well in the shadows,
they crept forward silently to a rear door of the
building, and here Handsome paused for a moment, and
put down a canvas bag that he had been carrying all
the way; and now he whispered in Nick’s ear:
“There are the tools, Dago.
Let’s see what kind of a cracksman you are.”
Nick did not need a second bidding.
Having determined upon his course, he did not hesitate,
but he seized the bag, pulled open the mouth of it,
and, having selected such tools as he wanted, he applied
himself to the task that had been set for him.
A professional burglar of long experience
could not have gotten that huge oak door open more
quickly and silently than Nick Carter did, and Handsome
gave him an approving pat on the shoulder.
He was the first to enter the bank,
Nick following, and the others coming behind them;
and presently, after forcing another door, they stood
crouching inside the bank itself.
A dim light burned in a gas jet in
the centre of the large room, which was divided only
by the wire screen which separated the customers’
side of the rail from the clerks; and almost beneath
the light, exactly where it could shine full upon
the steel doors, was the huge safe of the institution.
A person might not stand in front
of that safe for a moment without being in full view
from the street should any one happen to pass there.
Nick saw that at a glance; but nevertheless Handsome
silently placed a drill and a bottle of liquid in
his hand, and motioned that he was to begin the dangerous
part of the work.
“Didn’t you bring a screen
with you, you chump?” demanded Nick, in a whisper.
“If you had told me what the lay was, I’d
have made one.”
Handsome nodded, evidently well pleased;
and at the same time he produced a roll from under
his coat, and gave it to the detective. Nick
unrolled it, and found that it was merely a piece of
burlap, rather more than a yard long, and about two
feet in width, and with a roll of cord attached to
each corner of it.
He knew what that was intended for
readily enough, and, taking it in his hands, he crept
forward without another word, and quickly attached
the four strings to objects which he selected as being
situated about right for his purposes.
In two minutes the screen was in place,
and it afforded a perfect shelter from view from the
street, and just the sort of one that would never
be noticed from the outside at all, unless a person
stopped at the window and deliberately peered inside-and
that nobody was likely to do, unless something else
first attracted attention.
In fixing the screen in place so quickly
and perfectly, Nick evidently won over not only Handsome,
but the others; and now there was no more question
of his doing the drilling alone. Each man took
his own part of the work in silence, as if Nick had
always been one of them; and, besides, now there was
no time to be lost.
Drilling through the steel doors of
a safe is not an easy task, and it is not done quickly,
although expert burglars carry tools these days which
will cut anything.
They took their turns at the drill,
as they took them also with the acids and oil; and
the work went on merrily until the holes were ready
for the charges.
And here again it seemed that Handsome
was determined to try Nick out to the last, for he
bent forward and whispered in his ear:
“Prove one thing more, Dago, and you’re
made.”
“Want me to do the blowing?” asked Nick.
Handsome nodded.
“All right,” said Nick. “Light
out, then.”
“But -”
“Get out, I say. If I do the blowing I’m
boss for the time being. Git!”
They did; and again, with the implements
and the explosives at hand, Nick went to work; and,
as before he worked rapidly and well-as
if he were an experienced hand at that sort of employment.
And then, when the charge was ready,
Nick pulled up the heavy rope matting from the floor,
and after doubling it again and again until there
was a huge wad of it, he braced it with desks and chairs
against the front of the safe; and when all that was
done to his satisfaction, he lighted the fuse, and
ran back to the rear hallway, where the others were
watching and waiting.
They had not long to wait after that.
There was a lapse of perhaps a minute and a half,
and then a dull, booming roar shook the building, and
the burglars rushed forward.
Now was the time when they were compelled
to work rapidly, if ever.
It was true that Nick had so muffled
the sound of the explosion that it was hardly possible
that the noise of it had roused anybody at all; but
there was always a chance of somebody near at hand
being wakeful or watchful.
At any moment they might be interrupted-and
no burglar likes to be interrupted. It always
means a fight, in which somebody is likely to get
killed, and burglars rarely do any killing unless they
have to in order to escape.
They rushed forward together; but
now Nick purposely kept in the background. He
had no idea of being taken himself if they should be
interrupted; nor did he wish to give his companions
an opportunity to kill any person who might interrupt
them. It was all right from his standpoint to
participate in the burglary, in order that he might
ultimately catch all the thieves; but he did not wish
to be a party to any fight that might come of it.
But he was made to hold one of the
bags while Handsome filled it from the inside of the
safe.
They pried open the inner compartments,
and threw them indiscriminately upon the floor as
soon as they were emptied; they jimmied open the steel
boxes as readily as if they had been made of softest
pine-and in twenty minutes after the explosion
they were stealthily climbing the fence again, into
the courthouse yard.
And, so far as they could see, not
a soul in the village had been awakened or alarmed.
They returned to the shed, where they
had left the automobile, by the same route they had
covered in approaching the bank; the machine was backed
out; they entered it, turned on the power, and sped
away through the silent streets as they had come,
with nobody the wiser for what they had done, the
havoc they had wrought, and the wealth they had stolen.
Down beside the road where they had
made the change before, from the track of the railway
to the highway, they paused long enough to secure
the iron wheels, and here the change was made back
to a railway machine. The car was lifted in sections
to the tracks, and with everything adjusted they were
soon flying down the shining rails at a frightful
rate of speed, and in silence-for it seemed
to be a rule among these men that there should be
no talking.
Mile after mile they covered in this
way, and then the machine was slowed down, and came
to a stop at the point where it had picked up Handsome
and Nick at first, and here they got down, and, having
taken out the plunder, stood beside the track until
the machine had disappeared from view.
“Now, Dago, help me with the
swag,” said Handsome; and together they picked
it up, and once more started for the outlaws’
retreat in the middle of the impassable swamp.
When they were in the boat, and almost
ready to land where Nick had thrown the man into the
water, Handsome turned to him, and whispered:
“You’re all right, Dago. I’ll
tell Madge so, too!”